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March 1st, 2011

POWER OF 3: San Jose native turned international DJ M3 headlines the South Bay Electronic Music Fest at Johnny V’s Friday.

FOR most of the 14 years Scott Rich of Make Sense Muzik has been producing underground electronic music shows in the South Bay, he featured strictly house and techno music.

But eventually, he began to get frustrated with the splintered electronic scene. with well over 100 different permutations of the sound fighting for attention, from ambient noise to hardstep to witch house, the various subgenres were acting more and more like cliques, in his opinion. A fan of many different styles, he began collaborating with other types of DJs to incorporate different sounds.

“I’d like to have unity in electronic music,” says Rich. “In the past, there’s been a huge divide.” most often, Rich has been mixing house with dub step, a combination that’s proven to be hugely successful. “The dubstep people are liking house, and the house people are liking dubstep,” he says.

But even he has never attempted anything as ambitious as the South Bay Electronic Music Fest, which Make Sense will be producing Friday, Feb. 25, at Johnny V’s.

The festival features almost two dozen DJs in areas dedicated to specific styles. Rich booked a house/techno lineup headlined by DJ M3 (a.k.a. Manny), a San Jose native who was hugely influential in shaping the Bay Area house scene throughout the 1990s and soon found himself spinning at clubs around the world. Also featured are San Jose’s Lucas Rodenbush, better known as E.B.E., an electronic music pioneer whose music held its own next to John Digweed’s in the movie Groove; Sunnyvale’s Paul Leath, Arturo Garces, the manager of Chris Jackson’s San Jose house imprint Jump Recordings; and Rich himself.

“All of the artists are rooted in the South Bay,” says Rich, with pride.

That’s also true in the down-tempo/hip hop/ambient/glitch area, which features headliner Tape Mastah Steph, who made his name creating beats for the groundbreaking underground San Jose crew Subcontents. Also performing is Christopher Leath, brother of Paul and the other half of their partnership “Leathal DJs”; DJ Sparkle, de Nada and Joint Effort (Stephen Nicholas).

For the dubstep/jungle area, Rich enlisted the know-how of ubiquitous South Bay DJ Andrew Moyco, a.k.a. Audio Dru. Moyco has spun a lot of different types of music, but dubstep is his current passion, and he sees the scene growing fast around the Bay Area. “It took a long time for electro to catch on,” says Moyco. “Now it’s everywhere. I see the same thing for dub step.”

He also sees how the subgenre has reignited electronic music with a new influx of fans. “The dubstep scene has resurrected the rave scene,” he says. “There’s a whole new generation.”

Moyco thinks it’s fitting that the Electronic Music Fest is the centerpiece of a weekend celebrating the 8th anniversary of Johnny Van Wyk’s club. After bouncing around with his cutting-edge musical agenda, from VooDoo Lounge to Fahrenheit to Mission Ale House, Moyco’s found a permanent home at Johnny V’s. “He always supports the underground,” Moyco says of Van Wyk.

Moyco has booked Santa Cruz’s Dub Pirates to headline the dubstep/jungle area, which will also feature Oakland’s Mr. Kitt, who’s part of the Helicopter Showdown crew, and local DJs like HAK (who has been spinning since the days of the Cactus Club), TKO, Dubstantial, Wrek-One, Smizzle, Anigmal and Audio Dru himself. “There’s a pretty diverse draw,” says Moyco.

Perhaps the most impressive part of this ambitious event, however, is that it’s free. for Moyco, that means an opportunity to get exposure for the music, recognition for the area’s talent and one huge populist party.

“It’s for the people,” he says.

the festival was so wide-ranging in scope that some of the artists Rich first approached with the concept couldn’t even wrap their minds around what he was doing.

“I got a couple of negative reactions at first. they said, ‘I don’t know, it sounds a little bit wild,’” he remembers. “But once they saw it on paper, they called me back immediately and said, ‘I want to do it.’ everybody was so enthused about it.”

Proving, perhaps, that he’s not the only one in the electronic scene calling for one big tent.

“We all know there are subgenres. There will always be subgenres,” he says. “But it’s about respect.”

South Bay Electronic Music Fest

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Midnight Sun: Sully's Comedy Cellar, Parkville's newest (only …

October 29th, 2010

Captain and Consul Frederik Carl Christian Koebke, 1837 – 1881

July 10th, 2010


Throughout the years stubs and articles have been written about Frederik Kbke, the first Dane to serve as Consul of Denmark in Thailand. The problem is, that the newer ones tend to build on the older ones adding a bit of flavor here and a dash of spice there. We therefore get a picture of the Consul as the black sheep of his family. This was certainly not the case.08.07.2010 | news

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Scoring pink goals for cancer awareness

May 18th, 2010

PINK isn’t the average footballer’s colour of choice, but hundreds were proud to make an exception at the weekend.

Many Bendigo football and netball clubs swapped their traditional red footballs or white netballs for hot pink match balls as part of the second annual Pink Footy and Netball Day Breast Cancer Network fundraiser.

The event was held in partnership with the Victorian Country Football League, Netball Victoria and AFL Canberra, with money raised from the purchase of the pink footballs and netballs going to BCNA.

Bendigo Football Netball League chief executive Steven Oliver said the league was keen to support Pink Footy and Netball Day.

“Footy is a great thing to be able to get these sort of messages across to the wider community. It’s something we’ll certainly continue to support.”

The Bendigo Junior and Loddon Valley football leagues, and the Golden City Netball Association also took part in the day.

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